Luke Cage (Season 2)
"Hero is your word, not mine."
Given superstrength and durability by a sabotaged experiment, a wrongly accused man escapes prison to become a superhero for hire.
Bushmaster vs. Mariah Dillard. Great villain — but the series was cancelled before its story could resolve.
Why It Matters in the MCU
The Luke Cage series is the franchise's most explicitly African American cultural production, set in Harlem and structured around music, barbershop culture, and historical community identity in a way that no other Marvel property had attempted. Cottonmouth's relationship to Black music and Harlem's power structures gives the first half of the first season a moral complexity that the villain introduced in the second half can't match. Mahershala Ali's Cornell Stokes is one of the most finely observed characters in all of Marvel's television, and his exit from the show is the series' single greatest structural miscalculation.
Where It Fits in the MCU
Luke Cage (Season 2) sits at position 61 of 133 in the MCU's story-chronological order, placing it within the Phase 3B — Civil War & Fallout (2016–2018) era. It is rated Optional — can be skipped without losing the main thread. Watching in story-chronological order provides the most coherent character development experience — individual arcs build naturally toward the franchise's major crossover events, with each film's post-credits scenes carrying forward into what follows.
Official Trailer
Cast
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